Vivaldi 1.7: screenshots and usability improvements

Vivaldi 1.7 Stable has just been released by the makers of the web browser for the supported operating systems Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.

The new version of the Vivaldi browser introduces several new features and usability improvements to the browser.

The big new feature of the release is native support for creating screenshots. Other features improve the browser's usability, for instance by letting you change the visibility of extension icons in the browser, improving sound control for tabs, or by introducing a history panel.

Vivaldi 1.7

Vivaldi 1.7 ships with a capture page icon in the browser's status bar that you can click on to take a screenshot.

You may capture full page screenshots or screenshots based on your selection. The screenshot height cap was raised to 30,000 from 20,000 in the release version.

Full page screenshots work exactly as you'd expect them to. Select to save the screenshot as a png or jpg file, or copy it to the clipboard, and hit capture page afterwards.

Vivaldi captures the entire page up to the height limit. This means that it scrolls automatically so that all of the page within the limit is captured.

The selection based screenshot offers the same options, but will capture the contents of a rectangle that you draw in the browser UI instead.

Vivaldi users who prefer to use the keyboard can map the capture actions to keyboard shortcuts so that they can be invoked using these instead. Load vivaldi://settings/keyboard/ to make these changes in the browser's preferences.

It feels a bit strange that you find the two capture area options under window, and the two capture page options under page. While I can see what Vivaldi did there, it would make more sense to bundle all four together.

There is also a new option to take an area screenshot when you jot down notes in the Vivaldi browser (as opposed to taking full page screenshots only before).

Vivaldi 1.7 Usability Improvements

The new version of the web browser ships with several usability improvements. These are all smaller changes that may have a huge impact depending on how you use the browser.

You can right-click on any extension icon in the Vivaldi browser to hide it from the main toolbar (and menu). This is especially useful for extension icons that do not offer any functionality.

Vivaldi 1.7 ships with a new option. You need to enable it on vivaldi://settings/addressbar/ first by checking "show extensions visibility toggle". This adds a toggle button to the toolbar that you can activate to hide or show all extension icons displayed in the toolbar.

Another improvement comes to the browser's handling of audio. Vivaldi 1.7 gives you better control over muting some or all tabs in the browser.

For instance, to use quick commands you would simply hit F2 in Vivaldi, and type mute to see all mute related commands the browser supports. Pick the one you want, and hit enter to execute the action.

Vivaldi, like Chrome and Firefox, flags sites that attempt to send passwords over HTTP. Look for the "not secure" notice next to the web address that indicates this.

Vivaldi wanted to launch a new history panel in Vivaldi 1.7, but decided against it. Expect it to launch with a future version of the web browser.

Last but not least, Startpage Search is a new search engine that ships with Vivaldi by default.

Closing Words

Vivaldi 1.7 is a lighter update to the browser when it comes to features. Part of the browser's user base will certainly find these features useful, and they are.

Still, 2017 is the year that Vivaldi has to demonstrate that the company can make the next step. Plans are underway to ship the first mobile version of Vivaldi, and also to ship the long awaited mail client.

These two, if done correctly, will certainly boost the appeal of the browser.

Summary

Article Name

Vivaldi 1.7: screenshots and usability improvements

Description

Vivaldi 1.7 Stable has just been released by the makers of the web browser for the supported operating systems Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.

Author

Martin Brinkmann

Publisher

Ghacks Technology News

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About Martin Brinkmann

Martin Brinkmann is a journalist from Germany who founded Ghacks Technology News Back in 2005. He is passionate about all things tech and knows the Internet and computers like the back of his hand.You can follow Martin on Facebook, Twitter or Google+

I don’t find the Screenshots feature useless. In fact, I’ve already used it a couple of times, it’s really neat and fast :-) Mind that the Screenshots feature was implemented mainly by one person so it’s not like the focus on implementing Sync was lost or anything. They’re working on it and I’ve heard that it’s already working (at least as a proof of concept) in internal (non-public) builds.

Sync’ing over my own _trustworthy_ network at home, fine. This is not to say that I distrust Vivaldi per se, it’s the loss of control over the data flow, but I prefer _my_ data to remain _my_ data. So even it those transfers were properly secured (no exceptions for an end-to-end encryption) I still would to be able to entirely disable WAN sync’ing and keep it within the realms that I have more control over.

Wish Vivaldi could be faster – that is a killer for me to use it, let them use ads like Chrome. Too many embedded features will slow it down anyway. What to do with screenshots? There are so many 3rd party applications. This is an unnecessary cost. The lighter, the better. Nothing beats the feature like speed.

I’ve recently enabled this (https://forum.vivaldi.net/post/86312) and it’s a lot faster now. Also, this Screenshots feature is really lightweight, it only uses a few MB of RAM unlike 3rd party extensions which eat up somewhere b/w 20-100 MB. (3rd party app doesn’t count as you can only take screenshots of entire sites with extensions) I’m using the feature, it’s really handy :)

It used to be there in Opera <= 12, then was not available in any browser at all until Vivaldi 1.7. (Yes, there are extensions for some browsers such as Firefox who offer somewhat similar features. But these extensions are limited in functionality, sometimes poorly supported, and you have to go through the hassle of finding, installing, and maintaining all those extensions. In Vivaldi, it's professional, and it's built-in from the beginning!)

i installed vivaldi on linux and like it very much.but i cant see how to get a flash player working.flash is not on the list of plugins…so i cant use it at the moment. any ideas how to get flash working.?

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Ghacks is a technology news blog that was founded in 2005 by Martin Brinkmann. It has since then become one of the most popular tech news sites on the Internet with five authors and regular contributions from freelance writers.